Literature DB >> 23850503

Windows of vulnerability: maternal separation, age, and fluoxetine on adolescent depressive-like behavior in rats.

N Freund1, B S Thompson, J Denormandie, K Vaccarro, S L Andersen.   

Abstract

Early exposure to stressful life events plays a significant role in adolescent depression. Clinical studies have identified a number of factors that increase the risk of depression, including sex of the subject, duration of the stressor, and genetic polymorphisms that elevate serotonin levels. In this study we used the maternal separation (MS) model to investigate to what extent these factors interacted during development to manifest in depressive-like behavior in male and female rats. The triadic model of learned helplessness parses depressive-like behavior into aspects of controllable, uncontrollable, and motivational behaviors. This model was used to investigate how the timing of MS between the ages of postnatal day (P) 2-9 and P9-16 interacted with either simultaneous vehicle (saline; 1ml/kg; i.p.) or fluoxetine (10mg/kg) exposure, which was used to enhance serotonin levels; these experiments also compared the effect of a vehicle injection during these developmental periods to a no injection control. Vehicle injections alone increased helplessness in the controllable condition in male rats when injected between P9-16 only, and did not interact further with MS. MS at both ages decreased controllability in male adolescents; females demonstrated an increase in controllability after MS. Elevated serotonin at P2-9 increased escape latencies in male and female control and MS subjects. Fluoxetine exposure at P9-16 increased helplessness in controls. Fluoxetine decreased helplessness in MS males independent of age, but increases helplessness in MS females. This study highlights the importance of age of MS (MS between P2-9 increases helplessness in males more than females), the duration of the stressor (previous results show females are effected by longer MS [P2-20], but not shorter [this study]), and that elevated serotonin increases escape latencies to a greater extent in females.
Copyright © 2013 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ES; IS; LH; MS; NS; P; abuse; adolescence; depression; escapable shock; fluoxetine; inescapable shock; learned helplessness; maternal separation; no shock; postnatal day; stress

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23850503      PMCID: PMC5267225          DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2013.06.066

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroscience        ISSN: 0306-4522            Impact factor:   3.590


  42 in total

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Review 6.  Serotonin-related rodent models of early-life exposure relevant for neurodevelopmental vulnerability to psychiatric disorders.

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